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Chicago examiner vol xiv no 184 a m monday Chicago july 24 1916 monday registered tj s patent office t>-dtr<l7 nvp r>t7t\jt n Chicago and klsewheiir jrxilcfcj u-mil ljiijni suburbs two cents 2 society girls find 3 dead in new lake forest mystery discover man his wife and child shot to death beside bridle path in lake forest near onwentsia club lentity of victims remains un lsolved after coroner's verdict that husband was the slayer initials are the only clew wo lake forest society girls went horseback riding early â– yesterday along the bank of te skokie river in deerpath ave ne quite near the exclusive on ifentsla clubhouse but even in ach surroundings they came upon | ; triple tragedy the bodies of a n a woman and a baby all shot f death startled their horses hocked the young women and again rought the name of lake forest ato a murder mystery the young women who discov red the bodies are the misses jane lollis daughter of w j hollis and margaret mclntosh they were cantering along the bridle path near he bridge over the skokie when mies mclntosh's horse shied and snorted they drew bridle and looked to see what had startled the i horse and saw a man and woman lying beside the road apparently bleep sight of death frightens girls i rode up close to see if anything vas the matter said miss mcln osh and 1 saw blood on the man's ead oh dear we were fright ned worse than the horses we ode over to the onwentsia club nd told the men there that some hing awful had happened manager her-ry rhode and watch lan clarence knoff of the onwent ia club ran over to the place guided y the young women thinking there ad been an auto accident instead ley found the bÂ»dy of a young wom n pillowed on a man's coat a bullet lole i n her temple and another over er heart three feet from her the nan lay a wound in his temple a evolver with four empty shells was ound clutched in his hand then resently the searchers found a six nor;ths-old baby lying twenty feet way in the grass a bullet hole in ts forehead nitials l a c the only clew coroner john l taylor called a ury and held an inquest at once but hough the jury decided that the man lad shot the woman and the baby nd then killed himself they could not establish their identity they ound that the man's first name was lloyd hla initials l a c the woman's name nora and the baby's rthur that was all miss hannah jensen of 88 western avenue lake forest testified that he three had been living at her boarding house since thursday but he did not know their surname â€” she leard only the names they called each other the man had told her hat he was a bookkeeper for tho buick motor company and was on acation from flint mich she re ailed that the man had said he was going to write to a mrs karl f rohler and it was further learned eat he did mail a letter to mrs koh â€¢ at rural route no 2 flint mich a.n uncle of mrs kohler elzo tchel gardener of the w s north bell threatens invasion after mexico raiders el paso tex july 23 â€” gen eral george bell jr has in formed the carranza com mander at guadelupe sixty miles southeast of here unless the ban dits who raided the reynolds ranch opposite that point last night are apprehended and the stock returned he will pursue the raiders in mexico with an armed force two troops of catalry are being held at fabens in readiness to cross the rio grande as soon as the word is given the military authorities here are of the opinion that the raid ers were from the carranza gar rison it is known that the stock was driven into the town of guadelupe where carranza sol diers are stationed u.s militia and mexicans engage in border fight snipers again attack ninth mas sachusetts outpost whiph returns the fire el paso tex july 23 â€” a do ! tachment of company c ninth mas sachusetts infantry of boston was j engaged in a skirmish fight by car rancista troops on the border here to-nig-ht the mexicans retired after more than one hundred shots had been exchanged no casualties were suf fered by the militiamen it was impossible to determine because of the darkness whether the carran cistas had suffered any losses lieutenant william kevner com manding the detachment declared the mexicans began the firing with out cause the guardsmen were on outpost duty on the rio grande near camp cotton a volley of twenty shots on the mexican side signaled the attack the americans threw themselves on the ground and returned the fire directing their aim by the flash of the mexican rifles across the river for fifteen minutes the firing con tinued other detachments of the militia were rushed to the scene the firing had ceased when they ar rived t m patterson noted colorado editor dies denver july 23 â€” former sen ator thomas m patterson one of the best known newspaper men in the united states died suddenly at his home here at 1 o'clock this afternoon of dilation of the heart he was seventy-six yeara of age and leaves a fortune of between 3,000,000 and 5,000,000 senator patterson was editor and publisher of the rocky mountain news and the denver times for many years and retired three years ago three in auto hurled 50 feet none killed two women and a baby were hurled fifty feet and the auto in which they were riding was reduced to splinters when an aurora-elgin train struck it yet nobody was ulled mrs m s strong wife of the busi ness manager of the publication the electric vehicle suffered a broken arm and mrs j o"hara and her baby were bruised all live in elmhurst the scene of the accident is a grade crossing with neither danger signal nor watchman armour 8 arrive at briar cliff lodge briar cliff manor n t july 23 â€” mrs philip d armour mrs j ogden armour miss k gruber and martin shultz of Chicago have ar rived at briar cliff lodge for the summer fairy tales of orphan come true little iva flehl left alone when father was killed in cedar rapids finds a rich home from charity institutions to sur roundings of wealth will be her transition this afternoon all the beautiful fairy tales ever i written will come true when the clock strikes 2 this afternoon at ; least they will all be true to ten-year old iva fiehl â€” the cinderella of ce i dar rapids la she lives in the home of the friendless now but at 2 o'clock this afternoon she will step into a won derful limousine with a footman and a chauffeur in livery and then she will ride in state along the lake i shore to her new home where there j are maids and butlers to wait on her i she will have private yachts to ride ! fn a winter home in california j even-thing good that money can buy iva's father was killed in cedar j eapids and there was no one to care for her but coroner king while investigating the father's death met the child and became deeply inter ested in her and took her home and let her play on his grand piano â€” until a farmer and his wife came along and offered her a home goes oit to farm the coroner willing to sacrifice j his own delight in the child's society for the sake of her welfare decided that a farm would be a good place for her to grow up he let her go and the farmer wanted to adopt her but the relatives objected the mother wanted iva but for reasons â€” the court decided against the mother and iva was placed in the home of the friendless where she waited for her fairy tales to come true meanwhile mrs frank j kelley 3204 sheridan road who has five sons and no daughters was yearning for a little girl in her home she asked friends to help her find one then there came to cedar rapids an old friend of coroner king w c rickard who used to live in mexico the coroner took rickard to see iva and rickard was deeply impressed he came to Chicago soon afterward and when he heard about the wishes of mrs kelley he decided that that was just the place for iva wires for child he wrote to mrs kelley and de scribed iva with such enthusiasm that mrs kelley at once wired cedar rapids to have the child brought to Chicago this afternoon accompanied by an officer of the home of the friend less iva will come to get acquainted with her new home frank j kelley is said to be very wealthy a lumber dealer he shares his wife's wish for a little girl who may be brought up as a daughter the youngest of his fivo sons truby is just iva's age and he is planning an elaborate program of games for the first day's playtime iva will have a governess of her own her musical talent will be de veloped for all it 1b worth and prob nbly sho will have the advantage of foreign travel and education a week t.go life was a gray prospect to her â€” but now it is rosy anarchy beautiful pastor tells john d cleveland 0 july 23 â€” an archy is a beautiful theory but a failure because it is not human the rev dr john eaton of new york told his former parishioners to-day in the euclid avenue baptiÃŸt church â€” and john d rockefeller who was an attentive listener nodded sagely charles darwin who made the miss ing link famous is responsible for the great war according to dr ea ton h^^^fce his idea of the superman l s the directing force in woman killed as auto turns over driver leaves body and returns to city daughter of pullman man dies in mysterious accident father sends for her body mrs may redman of east st louis met death saturday afternoon near porter ind when an automobile in which she was riding turned over accounts of the accident were garbled no one seemed to know how it occurred and bernard deimel 6716 south park avenue who was driving the car hurried back to Chicago as soon as the few slight injuries he sus tained had been dressed leaving the body of his companion in the morgue at chesterton ind before he left deimel said the woman's body would be sent lor to day but he refused to give her ad j dress or the names of any of her relatives he said he would notify them himself further complications developed when another undertaker appeared in chesterton with a letter from ed ward quinlivan 11124 south michi gan avenue pullman declaring mrs redman was his daughter and direct ing that the body be removed mrs redman was the wife of james redman a moving picture the ater owner in east st louis and the mother of two children she was twenty-six years old and had been visihng her family at pullman mrs redman met deimel at 6 o'clock saturday morning qulnll van declared and they started for a da'y's trip in deimel's machine at the deimel home nothing was known of mrs redman two other persons in the motor party mr and mrs h j anderson who gave their address as minneapolis were slightly in jured de castellane again asks pope for decree rome july 23 â€” count boni de castellane has presented to the pope new evidence in his suit for the an nulment of his marriage with the former anna gould his attorney de clares the evidence will prove miss gould married the count with the intention of divorcing him if later she became dissatisfied this is suf ficient to annual a catholic marriage the attorney says the pope has de cided to submit the case to the same commission of cardinals who ex amined it previously and decided against an annulment cardinal gibbons is 82 years old by international news service baltimore july 23 â€” cardinal gibbons eighty-two years old to-day celebrated mb birthday at the home of joseph shriver a quiet place in carroll county for twenty years he has taken his birthday dinner as the guest of mr shriver to-day there were twenty persons at the table examinerhad large gain sunday compared with the same busi ness day last year following are the rains or losses of the Chicago examiner in display advertising for each day of this month â€” 4,000,000 in cargoof submarine trede boat by damon rimyon treasure of interned kronprin zessin cecelie declared to have been stowed away secretly in hold of the deutschland delay in departure of submer sible liner said to be due to negotiations for insurance toj cover gold it will take back.j staff correspondent of international news service baltimore md july 23 â€” all the treasure of the kronprinzessin cecelie is tucked away aboard the little green undersea packet the deutschland they broag-ht it flitwn fro'ift bos ton where the cecelie ib interned one day last week the day they pulled the screen of old freight barges around the german subma rine and took other precautions in small bags by rail the money came â€” 4,000,000 in gold and it was trundled aboard the deutschland and stored in secret compartments this is on the authority of a man who knows nameless he must be in this story â€” but he knows hope for insurance they claimed it was nickel they were putting on the submarine didn't they says the man well it was good old gold and the reason they are not hurrying the deutschland back to germany with that gold is because they haven't given up hope of getting insurance i guess that wouldn't be a grab for those war boats that are hang ing around outside the capes eh he queried they've got rubber and some nickel on that diver all right just like they say but the richiit part of the cargo is the gold and it's all there â€” every penny of the four millions tet there is still another story â€” or maybe it might be called a theory â€” as to the delay of the deutschland that differs materially from this tale of the continued attempts to get insurance bremen expected to-day is said that captain koenig is waiting to see the bremen the bremen is expected to-morrow for that matter it was expected yester day which means that it is expected any day if the bremen fails to arrive if she is taken or destroyed at sea it is said that koenig will intern the deutschland at once rather than run the risk of losing his boat and men the germans do not minimize the danger awaiting the dash of the undersea boat they know all about the warships of the allies doing sen try duty off the capes and they know that it is going to be no easy task for the deutschland to elude them hot day in baltimore it was very hot to-day in balti more one of the results of the heat was a rumor to the effect that the submarine now in the harbor is not the deutschland but the bremen that the bremen slipped in a few nights ago took the berth of the deutschland and that the crew of the bremen then navigated the deutsch land away from this place the last part of the rumor was perhaps formulated because there had to be some explanation for the appearance of some of the crew in their locust point haunts then too captain koenig was around town a trifle heated but otherwise unruf fled it certainly was a hot day in bal timore there being still another rumor to the effect that the subma rine in the harbor is neither the deutschland nor the bremen that it is not in fact a submarine at all but a rubber imitation which had 1 been carried in a collapsed form by the deutschland and left inflated in j i the berth at the foot of andres etreet 1 while the deutschland uid a quiet sneak 1 rifling of u.s mail justified by british brief answer made general complaint and argument by washington ignored but reply is promised later surprise is shown over insinuation in our note london july 23 â€” the foreign office has published the text of the note handed to the american ambassador replying to american complaints against the british censorship of mails the reply is confined to the few specific allegations made in the recent american note it is stated that the formal answer to the general arguments advanced by the washington government is still under consid eration by the allied government and will be forwarded in due course the two principal cases referred to in the present memo randum are those of the macniff horticultural company of new york and the standard underground cable company of pitts burgh the macniff company complained of the loss of perish able goods owing to the detention by the censor of shipping docu ments relating thereto tried to avoid any delays the british government states that as soon as the matter was brought to its attention it arranged to have a special mail bag for shipping papers which would be immediately censored so that no delay would occur in the case of the cable company it is stated that the gov ernment of the united states appeared to insinuate the delay in the mail of the cable company was directly connected with the fact that a british competitor had obtained a contract for which that company had been tendering the note adds his majesty's government is astonished that such an insinuation should be made especially as the complaint from the cable company appears not to have been adequately examined the memorandum goes on to show in considerable detail that tenders for the contracts referred to must have passed be tween the united states and norway on a date prior to that upon which the censorship of scandinavian mails began declares censors are efficient after detailing other cases the note continues : the specific complaints do not support the general charge against the efficiency of the british censorship * * his majesty's government will always be ready to explain in detail the working of the censorship as there is nothing regarding it which they wish to conceal many complaints when examined were proved to have arisen from badly directed letters the irregular sailing of neutral mail boats and other causes entirely outside of the control of his majesty's government and are often due to the action of ene mies to convoy american ships president wilson's plan by international news service washington july 23 â€” it was in timated in administration circles to day that president wilson is consid ering armed neutrality with which to defeat great britain's warfare upon america's neutral foreign trade under the guize of a blacklist of american individuals and firms the president was represented as being disturbed by the evidences of british aggression at the expense of citizens of the united states and to have indicated to members of the cabinet his determination to bring great britain to account two-fold action planned the action under consideration it was said is twofold first the furnishing of public ves sels as a convoy for merchant ships flying the american flag second the purchase from german owners of several large ships which have been tied up at their docks in this country mince the war began the establishment of an embargo was said to have been considered and discarded by administration of ficials as impracticable and injuri ous ; esitjargo not a cure the argument was that if th'e united stp.tes placed an embargo on 1 ti e shipment of supplies of all kmjte to great britain more american bus iness would be lost and the act would not cure the evil for which it would be intended the united states has treaties with several countries providing that mer chant ships flying the american flag engaged in innocent trade and ac companied by a public ship which would include lighthouse tenders revenue cutters or warships shall not be subject to visit and search it was hinted in washington that u s weather forecast i i Chicago and vicinity â€” gener ally fair monday and tuesday coaler monday night and tuesday gentle variable winds becoming gentle to moderate northeast by tuesday temperature for twenty-four hours ending 2 a n : highest sÂ«s lowest 7f mean 81 normal temperature for the day 73 excess of temperature since january 1 296 degree precipitation for twenty-four hours none ex cess of precipitation since january l 2.34 inches relative humidity 7 a m 87 2 r n . o 7 d m 70 barometric pressure reduced to sea ierel 7 t m 20.95 7 p m 29.93 sunrise to-day 4:3b siuib-t 7:it moon rise 1?:27 a m tih'sdhv cunpleto sovcrnment report on m it third line pierced by british at pozieres australians in heroic midnight dash thrust past objective and prevent teuton artillery attack by hand to hand fighting english after creeping forward for week in shambles renew smashing offensive reach within 2 miles of plateau crest war summary british pierce third german linr by capturing outer works on a fiv j mile front penetrating pozieres wedge is driven across the main h highway to bapaume main british objective teuton counter-attack forestalled furious battle still raging with british within two miles of matin puich the crest of the plateau petrograd claims german lines have been broken on fire-mile i front near riga t vienna admits retreat from m m gura to the high carpathian ridges bt frederick palmes m at the british front july 23 5 p m to the austral ians is the glory of to-day's ac tion which takes the british often m slve to the end of its third week or * what might be called the third phase not once la three weeks have th guns been silent all the while tft fighting has continued until the spec tator becomes numbed with the rou tine of this superhuman struggle mud-covered men return from the trenches and rested battalions go in a prisoners taken in each fresh attack express the same wonder at the per sistent hammering the british have / become a twenty-four hours a day army fighting at night as well as british creep forward for week in shambles the attack of july 1 initiating the offensive began at 7:30 in the morn ing that of july 14 began at 3 in the morning and that of to-day began at about 1 in the morning while resisting the many counter attacks through the week and al though the delville woods has be 1 come a shambles the british hare i been creeping forward i more little round spots new ad i vanced posts and penciled lines of saps and trenches xtend as the hu man moles dig thei way forward more german artillery and more troops have massed to u.<,ci h n a creasing number of british while british have kept moving near er and practicing shots at targets ior future concentrations of fire more important than ever for thÂ«r side there are points of hlg g nnd on the front of the british pressure both of the straining combatants in > i the strife for the positions say ija must have that v villages demolished in fury of shell fire all last week the correspondent kept his eye on some black stloklike points resembling broken telegraph poles which were once shade trees j in the village of pozieres villages like la boiselle have become so un recognizable from shell fire that one a does not know where the village be gins or ends sticks of trees whit tied ar i whittled by shell bursts finally are leveled by a direct hit at the bate fozieres was under tn mm au continued on 2d page 4th column continued on 4th paje th column v<oiuniu9 gain loss july 1 14.01 uly 2 sunday 68.17 uly 3 4.43 uly 4 19.88 uly s 22.83 uly 6 27.70 uly 7 9.59 uly 8 i.03 uly 9 sunday 39.50 uly 10 353 july 11 1156 uly 12 15.41 ulyl3 25.72 uly 14 15.84 uly is 2.59 uly 16 sunday 55.05 uly 17 2\m uly 18 27.84 uly 19 2.02 uly 20 5*8 uly 21 _.. 9.48 uly 22 2.16 july 23 25.62 total 430.05 6.03 total gain 424.02 cols these flfures from tfas washington praia an independent audit company are on the teals of 180 icate lines to ft column e whether you choose (^ j a car that has been driven ten s t miles or a thousand you can \â€” ' be sure that you are getting i your money's worth if you buy one of the used cars listed in i the examiner's want ad sec j 1 1 1 1 i edition i

Chicago examiner vol xiv no 184 a m monday Chicago july 24 1916 monday registered tj s patent office t>-dtrt7t\jt n Chicago and klsewheiir jrxilcfcj u-mil ljiijni suburbs two cents 2 society girls find 3 dead in new lake forest mystery discover man his wife and child shot to death beside bridle path in lake forest near onwentsia club lentity of victims remains un lsolved after coroner's verdict that husband was the slayer initials are the only clew wo lake forest society girls went horseback riding early â– yesterday along the bank of te skokie river in deerpath ave ne quite near the exclusive on ifentsla clubhouse but even in ach surroundings they came upon | ; triple tragedy the bodies of a n a woman and a baby all shot f death startled their horses hocked the young women and again rought the name of lake forest ato a murder mystery the young women who discov red the bodies are the misses jane lollis daughter of w j hollis and margaret mclntosh they were cantering along the bridle path near he bridge over the skokie when mies mclntosh's horse shied and snorted they drew bridle and looked to see what had startled the i horse and saw a man and woman lying beside the road apparently bleep sight of death frightens girls i rode up close to see if anything vas the matter said miss mcln osh and 1 saw blood on the man's ead oh dear we were fright ned worse than the horses we ode over to the onwentsia club nd told the men there that some hing awful had happened manager her-ry rhode and watch lan clarence knoff of the onwent ia club ran over to the place guided y the young women thinking there ad been an auto accident instead ley found the bÂ»dy of a young wom n pillowed on a man's coat a bullet lole i n her temple and another over er heart three feet from her the nan lay a wound in his temple a evolver with four empty shells was ound clutched in his hand then resently the searchers found a six nor;ths-old baby lying twenty feet way in the grass a bullet hole in ts forehead nitials l a c the only clew coroner john l taylor called a ury and held an inquest at once but hough the jury decided that the man lad shot the woman and the baby nd then killed himself they could not establish their identity they ound that the man's first name was lloyd hla initials l a c the woman's name nora and the baby's rthur that was all miss hannah jensen of 88 western avenue lake forest testified that he three had been living at her boarding house since thursday but he did not know their surname â€” she leard only the names they called each other the man had told her hat he was a bookkeeper for tho buick motor company and was on acation from flint mich she re ailed that the man had said he was going to write to a mrs karl f rohler and it was further learned eat he did mail a letter to mrs koh â€¢ at rural route no 2 flint mich a.n uncle of mrs kohler elzo tchel gardener of the w s north bell threatens invasion after mexico raiders el paso tex july 23 â€” gen eral george bell jr has in formed the carranza com mander at guadelupe sixty miles southeast of here unless the ban dits who raided the reynolds ranch opposite that point last night are apprehended and the stock returned he will pursue the raiders in mexico with an armed force two troops of catalry are being held at fabens in readiness to cross the rio grande as soon as the word is given the military authorities here are of the opinion that the raid ers were from the carranza gar rison it is known that the stock was driven into the town of guadelupe where carranza sol diers are stationed u.s militia and mexicans engage in border fight snipers again attack ninth mas sachusetts outpost whiph returns the fire el paso tex july 23 â€” a do ! tachment of company c ninth mas sachusetts infantry of boston was j engaged in a skirmish fight by car rancista troops on the border here to-nig-ht the mexicans retired after more than one hundred shots had been exchanged no casualties were suf fered by the militiamen it was impossible to determine because of the darkness whether the carran cistas had suffered any losses lieutenant william kevner com manding the detachment declared the mexicans began the firing with out cause the guardsmen were on outpost duty on the rio grande near camp cotton a volley of twenty shots on the mexican side signaled the attack the americans threw themselves on the ground and returned the fire directing their aim by the flash of the mexican rifles across the river for fifteen minutes the firing con tinued other detachments of the militia were rushed to the scene the firing had ceased when they ar rived t m patterson noted colorado editor dies denver july 23 â€” former sen ator thomas m patterson one of the best known newspaper men in the united states died suddenly at his home here at 1 o'clock this afternoon of dilation of the heart he was seventy-six yeara of age and leaves a fortune of between 3,000,000 and 5,000,000 senator patterson was editor and publisher of the rocky mountain news and the denver times for many years and retired three years ago three in auto hurled 50 feet none killed two women and a baby were hurled fifty feet and the auto in which they were riding was reduced to splinters when an aurora-elgin train struck it yet nobody was ulled mrs m s strong wife of the busi ness manager of the publication the electric vehicle suffered a broken arm and mrs j o"hara and her baby were bruised all live in elmhurst the scene of the accident is a grade crossing with neither danger signal nor watchman armour 8 arrive at briar cliff lodge briar cliff manor n t july 23 â€” mrs philip d armour mrs j ogden armour miss k gruber and martin shultz of Chicago have ar rived at briar cliff lodge for the summer fairy tales of orphan come true little iva flehl left alone when father was killed in cedar rapids finds a rich home from charity institutions to sur roundings of wealth will be her transition this afternoon all the beautiful fairy tales ever i written will come true when the clock strikes 2 this afternoon at ; least they will all be true to ten-year old iva fiehl â€” the cinderella of ce i dar rapids la she lives in the home of the friendless now but at 2 o'clock this afternoon she will step into a won derful limousine with a footman and a chauffeur in livery and then she will ride in state along the lake i shore to her new home where there j are maids and butlers to wait on her i she will have private yachts to ride ! fn a winter home in california j even-thing good that money can buy iva's father was killed in cedar j eapids and there was no one to care for her but coroner king while investigating the father's death met the child and became deeply inter ested in her and took her home and let her play on his grand piano â€” until a farmer and his wife came along and offered her a home goes oit to farm the coroner willing to sacrifice j his own delight in the child's society for the sake of her welfare decided that a farm would be a good place for her to grow up he let her go and the farmer wanted to adopt her but the relatives objected the mother wanted iva but for reasons â€” the court decided against the mother and iva was placed in the home of the friendless where she waited for her fairy tales to come true meanwhile mrs frank j kelley 3204 sheridan road who has five sons and no daughters was yearning for a little girl in her home she asked friends to help her find one then there came to cedar rapids an old friend of coroner king w c rickard who used to live in mexico the coroner took rickard to see iva and rickard was deeply impressed he came to Chicago soon afterward and when he heard about the wishes of mrs kelley he decided that that was just the place for iva wires for child he wrote to mrs kelley and de scribed iva with such enthusiasm that mrs kelley at once wired cedar rapids to have the child brought to Chicago this afternoon accompanied by an officer of the home of the friend less iva will come to get acquainted with her new home frank j kelley is said to be very wealthy a lumber dealer he shares his wife's wish for a little girl who may be brought up as a daughter the youngest of his fivo sons truby is just iva's age and he is planning an elaborate program of games for the first day's playtime iva will have a governess of her own her musical talent will be de veloped for all it 1b worth and prob nbly sho will have the advantage of foreign travel and education a week t.go life was a gray prospect to her â€” but now it is rosy anarchy beautiful pastor tells john d cleveland 0 july 23 â€” an archy is a beautiful theory but a failure because it is not human the rev dr john eaton of new york told his former parishioners to-day in the euclid avenue baptiÃŸt church â€” and john d rockefeller who was an attentive listener nodded sagely charles darwin who made the miss ing link famous is responsible for the great war according to dr ea ton h^^^fce his idea of the superman l s the directing force in woman killed as auto turns over driver leaves body and returns to city daughter of pullman man dies in mysterious accident father sends for her body mrs may redman of east st louis met death saturday afternoon near porter ind when an automobile in which she was riding turned over accounts of the accident were garbled no one seemed to know how it occurred and bernard deimel 6716 south park avenue who was driving the car hurried back to Chicago as soon as the few slight injuries he sus tained had been dressed leaving the body of his companion in the morgue at chesterton ind before he left deimel said the woman's body would be sent lor to day but he refused to give her ad j dress or the names of any of her relatives he said he would notify them himself further complications developed when another undertaker appeared in chesterton with a letter from ed ward quinlivan 11124 south michi gan avenue pullman declaring mrs redman was his daughter and direct ing that the body be removed mrs redman was the wife of james redman a moving picture the ater owner in east st louis and the mother of two children she was twenty-six years old and had been visihng her family at pullman mrs redman met deimel at 6 o'clock saturday morning qulnll van declared and they started for a da'y's trip in deimel's machine at the deimel home nothing was known of mrs redman two other persons in the motor party mr and mrs h j anderson who gave their address as minneapolis were slightly in jured de castellane again asks pope for decree rome july 23 â€” count boni de castellane has presented to the pope new evidence in his suit for the an nulment of his marriage with the former anna gould his attorney de clares the evidence will prove miss gould married the count with the intention of divorcing him if later she became dissatisfied this is suf ficient to annual a catholic marriage the attorney says the pope has de cided to submit the case to the same commission of cardinals who ex amined it previously and decided against an annulment cardinal gibbons is 82 years old by international news service baltimore july 23 â€” cardinal gibbons eighty-two years old to-day celebrated mb birthday at the home of joseph shriver a quiet place in carroll county for twenty years he has taken his birthday dinner as the guest of mr shriver to-day there were twenty persons at the table examinerhad large gain sunday compared with the same busi ness day last year following are the rains or losses of the Chicago examiner in display advertising for each day of this month â€” 4,000,000 in cargoof submarine trede boat by damon rimyon treasure of interned kronprin zessin cecelie declared to have been stowed away secretly in hold of the deutschland delay in departure of submer sible liner said to be due to negotiations for insurance toj cover gold it will take back.j staff correspondent of international news service baltimore md july 23 â€” all the treasure of the kronprinzessin cecelie is tucked away aboard the little green undersea packet the deutschland they broag-ht it flitwn fro'ift bos ton where the cecelie ib interned one day last week the day they pulled the screen of old freight barges around the german subma rine and took other precautions in small bags by rail the money came â€” 4,000,000 in gold and it was trundled aboard the deutschland and stored in secret compartments this is on the authority of a man who knows nameless he must be in this story â€” but he knows hope for insurance they claimed it was nickel they were putting on the submarine didn't they says the man well it was good old gold and the reason they are not hurrying the deutschland back to germany with that gold is because they haven't given up hope of getting insurance i guess that wouldn't be a grab for those war boats that are hang ing around outside the capes eh he queried they've got rubber and some nickel on that diver all right just like they say but the richiit part of the cargo is the gold and it's all there â€” every penny of the four millions tet there is still another story â€” or maybe it might be called a theory â€” as to the delay of the deutschland that differs materially from this tale of the continued attempts to get insurance bremen expected to-day is said that captain koenig is waiting to see the bremen the bremen is expected to-morrow for that matter it was expected yester day which means that it is expected any day if the bremen fails to arrive if she is taken or destroyed at sea it is said that koenig will intern the deutschland at once rather than run the risk of losing his boat and men the germans do not minimize the danger awaiting the dash of the undersea boat they know all about the warships of the allies doing sen try duty off the capes and they know that it is going to be no easy task for the deutschland to elude them hot day in baltimore it was very hot to-day in balti more one of the results of the heat was a rumor to the effect that the submarine now in the harbor is not the deutschland but the bremen that the bremen slipped in a few nights ago took the berth of the deutschland and that the crew of the bremen then navigated the deutsch land away from this place the last part of the rumor was perhaps formulated because there had to be some explanation for the appearance of some of the crew in their locust point haunts then too captain koenig was around town a trifle heated but otherwise unruf fled it certainly was a hot day in bal timore there being still another rumor to the effect that the subma rine in the harbor is neither the deutschland nor the bremen that it is not in fact a submarine at all but a rubber imitation which had 1 been carried in a collapsed form by the deutschland and left inflated in j i the berth at the foot of andres etreet 1 while the deutschland uid a quiet sneak 1 rifling of u.s mail justified by british brief answer made general complaint and argument by washington ignored but reply is promised later surprise is shown over insinuation in our note london july 23 â€” the foreign office has published the text of the note handed to the american ambassador replying to american complaints against the british censorship of mails the reply is confined to the few specific allegations made in the recent american note it is stated that the formal answer to the general arguments advanced by the washington government is still under consid eration by the allied government and will be forwarded in due course the two principal cases referred to in the present memo randum are those of the macniff horticultural company of new york and the standard underground cable company of pitts burgh the macniff company complained of the loss of perish able goods owing to the detention by the censor of shipping docu ments relating thereto tried to avoid any delays the british government states that as soon as the matter was brought to its attention it arranged to have a special mail bag for shipping papers which would be immediately censored so that no delay would occur in the case of the cable company it is stated that the gov ernment of the united states appeared to insinuate the delay in the mail of the cable company was directly connected with the fact that a british competitor had obtained a contract for which that company had been tendering the note adds his majesty's government is astonished that such an insinuation should be made especially as the complaint from the cable company appears not to have been adequately examined the memorandum goes on to show in considerable detail that tenders for the contracts referred to must have passed be tween the united states and norway on a date prior to that upon which the censorship of scandinavian mails began declares censors are efficient after detailing other cases the note continues : the specific complaints do not support the general charge against the efficiency of the british censorship * * his majesty's government will always be ready to explain in detail the working of the censorship as there is nothing regarding it which they wish to conceal many complaints when examined were proved to have arisen from badly directed letters the irregular sailing of neutral mail boats and other causes entirely outside of the control of his majesty's government and are often due to the action of ene mies to convoy american ships president wilson's plan by international news service washington july 23 â€” it was in timated in administration circles to day that president wilson is consid ering armed neutrality with which to defeat great britain's warfare upon america's neutral foreign trade under the guize of a blacklist of american individuals and firms the president was represented as being disturbed by the evidences of british aggression at the expense of citizens of the united states and to have indicated to members of the cabinet his determination to bring great britain to account two-fold action planned the action under consideration it was said is twofold first the furnishing of public ves sels as a convoy for merchant ships flying the american flag second the purchase from german owners of several large ships which have been tied up at their docks in this country mince the war began the establishment of an embargo was said to have been considered and discarded by administration of ficials as impracticable and injuri ous ; esitjargo not a cure the argument was that if th'e united stp.tes placed an embargo on 1 ti e shipment of supplies of all kmjte to great britain more american bus iness would be lost and the act would not cure the evil for which it would be intended the united states has treaties with several countries providing that mer chant ships flying the american flag engaged in innocent trade and ac companied by a public ship which would include lighthouse tenders revenue cutters or warships shall not be subject to visit and search it was hinted in washington that u s weather forecast i i Chicago and vicinity â€” gener ally fair monday and tuesday coaler monday night and tuesday gentle variable winds becoming gentle to moderate northeast by tuesday temperature for twenty-four hours ending 2 a n : highest sÂ«s lowest 7f mean 81 normal temperature for the day 73 excess of temperature since january 1 296 degree precipitation for twenty-four hours none ex cess of precipitation since january l 2.34 inches relative humidity 7 a m 87 2 r n . o 7 d m 70 barometric pressure reduced to sea ierel 7 t m 20.95 7 p m 29.93 sunrise to-day 4:3b siuib-t 7:it moon rise 1?:27 a m tih'sdhv cunpleto sovcrnment report on m it third line pierced by british at pozieres australians in heroic midnight dash thrust past objective and prevent teuton artillery attack by hand to hand fighting english after creeping forward for week in shambles renew smashing offensive reach within 2 miles of plateau crest war summary british pierce third german linr by capturing outer works on a fiv j mile front penetrating pozieres wedge is driven across the main h highway to bapaume main british objective teuton counter-attack forestalled furious battle still raging with british within two miles of matin puich the crest of the plateau petrograd claims german lines have been broken on fire-mile i front near riga t vienna admits retreat from m m gura to the high carpathian ridges bt frederick palmes m at the british front july 23 5 p m to the austral ians is the glory of to-day's ac tion which takes the british often m slve to the end of its third week or * what might be called the third phase not once la three weeks have th guns been silent all the while tft fighting has continued until the spec tator becomes numbed with the rou tine of this superhuman struggle mud-covered men return from the trenches and rested battalions go in a prisoners taken in each fresh attack express the same wonder at the per sistent hammering the british have / become a twenty-four hours a day army fighting at night as well as british creep forward for week in shambles the attack of july 1 initiating the offensive began at 7:30 in the morn ing that of july 14 began at 3 in the morning and that of to-day began at about 1 in the morning while resisting the many counter attacks through the week and al though the delville woods has be 1 come a shambles the british hare i been creeping forward i more little round spots new ad i vanced posts and penciled lines of saps and trenches xtend as the hu man moles dig thei way forward more german artillery and more troops have massed to u. i the strife for the positions say ija must have that v villages demolished in fury of shell fire all last week the correspondent kept his eye on some black stloklike points resembling broken telegraph poles which were once shade trees j in the village of pozieres villages like la boiselle have become so un recognizable from shell fire that one a does not know where the village be gins or ends sticks of trees whit tied ar i whittled by shell bursts finally are leveled by a direct hit at the bate fozieres was under tn mm au continued on 2d page 4th column continued on 4th paje th column v